| February
26, 2008
India v Sri Lanka, 11th ODI, CB Series, Hobart
India
3 for 180 (Gambhir 64*, Tendulkar 63) beat Sri Lanka 179
(Kapugedera 57*, Kumar 4-31, Ishant 4-41) by seven wickets
Scorecard
and ball-by-ball details
Sri Lanka beat themselves in their must-win game as India
eased into the finals with an emphatic seven-wicket win
in Hobart. In what was a pathetic batting display, Sri Lanka
skid from a comfortable 1 for 72 to a perilous 7 for 93,
blowing their chances on a flat deck. A composed fifty from
Chamara Kapugedera avoided a debacle but couldn't take away
the one-sided nature of the contest.
Chasing
180 was never going to be too much of a challenge for India,
especially when Sachin Tendulkar started to cut loose. Gautam
Gambhir added a polished fifty to what's been a fantastic
series, leaving Yuvraj Singh to add the final touches on
a comprehensive win which got India a bonus point they no
longer need. Sri Lanka travel to Melbourne for their final
league match but that will now be only of academic interest.
The
conditions were overcast, and the bowling accurate but nothing
could explain the batsmen pretending to be kamikaze artists.
Praveen Kumar, a seamer relying on gentle swing, triggered
the collapse before Ishant Sharma, a taller, pacier gunman,
pierced the soft underbelly further. Kumar Sangakkara's
poor shot selection opened up the flood gates and the rest
seemed more intent to catch the next flight out of Hobart.
On a flat pitch, they saw their chances of entering the
final up in smoke.
The script could have easily changed, especially when Sanath
Jayasuriya and Sangakkara were out in the middle. The duo
had shrugged off the early dismissal of Dilruwan Perera,
castled by a peach of a straightener from Ishant, by cashing
in on a slightly wayward new-ball spell. Sangakkara, like
he's done all series, laced cover-drives with ease while
Jayasuriya, who's endured a struggle in Australia, crunched
jabs through point to offer glimpses of his destructive
best. The pitch appeared to have eased out; India, who picked
five bowlers, seemed to have botched a great chance.
Everything
changed when Kumar was introduced. Playing only his third
ODI, he showed why he's so highly rated in the domestic
circuit. Sangakkara paid the price for taking Kumar too
lightly: he walked down the track and poked recklessly,
only to see Mahendra Singh Dhoni pull off a fine catch diving
to his left. Sangakkara telegraphed his intentions too early
and couldn't make allowance for Kumar's subtle movement
away from him.
Kumar
was ecstatic after his first international wicket but he
was to nab two more in quick time. Mahela Jayawardene was
undone by a sharp catch by Rohit Sharma at point - reacting
quickly to a fierce cut he pulled off a superb low catch
- before Chamara Silva wafted at one that shaped away to
watch Dhoni pull off another fine take. It was Dhoni's 100th
catch in ODIs. So smooth was the trajectory on that ball
that it might have inscribed a perfect parabola, snicking
the outside edge on its way through.
Jayasuriya,
watching all the mayhem from the other end, thought it was
best to break the shackles. Faced with a short ball from
Irfan Pathan he attempted a high-risk pull, kicking the
ground as the ball ballooned into Dhoni's gloves. Ishant
returned to remove Tillakaratne Dilshan, with a peach that
swung into his pads, before tempting Chaminda Vaas with
an indiscreet pull. On a good batting pitch, with the bowlers
doing nothing extraordinary, Sri Lanka were teetering on
the brink.
Kapugedera,
though, was like a sane voice in a mad melee. Along with
Lasith Malinga, he endured 12.2 overs without a boundary
before he began to gradually open out. He showed he had
all the shots - a smooth cover drive, a crackling straight
drive, and an innovative pick-up shot in front of square.
It
was his highest ODI score but only delayed the inevitable.
The sun was out by the time India's openers walked in and
the match was headed in only one direction. Shrugging off
his failures in the CB Series so far, Tendulkar set the
Bellerive alight with a dominant half-century. Cutting loose
against an uninspired bowling attack, he provided Australia
with an ominous signal ahead of the final.
Reading
Muttiah Muralitharan's doosras from the hand, he waltzed
down the track to loft over the covers. Ishara Amarasinghe's
dibbly-dobblies were never going to be a threat in these
conditions and he was greeted with three successive fours
in his first over: flicked delectably over square, cut savagely
through point and spanked in the same direction.
Gambhir
enhanced his ever-burgeoning reputation with an assured
knock. He read Malinga's slower ones and didn't spare his
quicker ones too, especially when they were wide and within
his striking zone. He handled Murali with ease, picking
him off for singles, and ensured he was out there when the
winning runs were struck. Sri Lanka won't want to remember
much from the CB Series but the sight of Gambhir cutting
them to ribbons may be a tough one to erase.
Siddhartha
Vaidyanathan is an assistant editor at Cricinfo
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